Recovery of Tin from Used Lead-Free Solder by Electro-Refining in Sulfuric Acid Solutions

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 738 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2014
Abstract
The recovery of Sn from used Pb-free solder (Sn, 3~4 % Ag, < 0.9 % Cu, < 1.2 % Pb) has been investigated by electrorefining in sulfuric acid solutions containing small amount of hydrochloric acid. This involved preparation of the anode material by melting and casting the used solder followed by refining. During electrorefining, dendritic tin was deposited on stainless steel cathode. Increasing the amount of hydrochloric acid up to 0.3 mol /L in the electrolyte enhanced the current efficiency to 92.2 % and the enrichment ratio of silver to 94.3 % in the anode slime which was otherwise 84.7% and 81.6 % in absence of HCl, respectively. The electrolyte containing hydrochloric acid has also prevented the precipitation of tin oxide in the bath. In the scale-up experiment using 1.6 kg anodes, 84.3 % current efficiency and close to 100 % Ag enrichment ratio were obtained, while the purity of electro-refined tin was over 99.9 %. The energy consumption of the winning process was found to be 0.151 kWh /kg-Sn which is competitive as compared to commercial tin electrorefining processes.
Citation
APA:
(2014) Recovery of Tin from Used Lead-Free Solder by Electro-Refining in Sulfuric Acid SolutionsMLA: Recovery of Tin from Used Lead-Free Solder by Electro-Refining in Sulfuric Acid Solutions. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2014.